Synecdoche, led by Lisa Sauve and Adam Smith took home first place in the Young Architect's Forum of Atlanta 10up Design Build Competition, who sponsored the construction of the pavilion. The pavilion was built on June 3rd in Atlanta.

Synecdoche has a partnership with a local hardwood mill in Michigan who donates the scrap edges left over from their milling process. These wood edges are all consistently 1″ in thickness, but vary in width and length. Synecdoche stacks the lengths in a square shape layering the wood higher and higher to create a tower. Gaps and cracks in the structure let light filter into the interior and a large door allows people to enter into the temporary pavilion. The weight of the hardwood scraps alone ensures the integrity and stability of the structure, which was tested to ensure that it can withstand wind gusts and other inclement weather.

The Edge Condition Pavilion is made from neither board nor wood chip and operates on the edge of a definitive material. Likewise the way in which it was built – stacking – is also on the edge of traditional construction. There are no mechanical fasteners used at all and this easily allows the temporary structure to be altered, enlarged or shrunk depending on the space or need. In the case of the tower for the Atlanta installation, Synecdoche did create a top portion that was fastened together to serve as a top weight for the entire structure as a way to ensure safety.

Disassembly of the pavilion is as simple as putting it together and the wood lengths are easily unstacked layer by layer, unlike Jenga. The scrap wood edges will then be returned to the hardwood mill, where they will be turned into wood chips or burned in the mill’s kiln for fuel. Synecdoche, led by Lisa Sauve and Adam Smith took home first place in the Young Architect’s Forum of Atlanta 10up Design Build Competition, who sponsored the construction of the pavilion. The pavilion was built on June 3rd in Atlanta.